The UN official employee says Israel’s operational operations would risk “catastrophic consequences”

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Middle East correspondent

Watch: An official UN employee says the reported plans to expand Netanyahu’s gas are at risk of “catastrophic consequences”

A UN senior official warned that there would be “catastrophic consequences” if Israel expanded its military operations in Gaza after reporting Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, insists on a complete re -occupation of the tape.

The auxiliary Secretary -General Miroslav Jencha said at a UN Security Council meeting, such a move would be “deeply anxious”, if true and could threaten the lives of more Palestinians, as well as Israeli hostages held by Hamas.

Israeli media reported that Netanyahu plans to meet his security office this week.

“The dying is thrown. We are going for the full conquest of the Gaza Strip – and defeating Hamas,” said a senior Israeli official.

The security cabinet to meet on Thursday will have to approve such an action.

It is assumed that the plan may be tactics to negotiate Hamas after a recent breakdown of negotiations to end the fire or attempt to recruit support from Netanyahu’s final coalition partners.

Israel is facing increasing international pressure on the humanitarian crisis in gas against the background of images and reports of Palestinians suffering from starvation or malnutrition.

In his remarks, Jencha warned against any expansion of Israel’s military operations.

“This would risk catastrophic consequences for millions of Palestinians and can further endanger the lives of other hostages in Gaza,” he said.

He added that according to international law, Gaza “is and should remain an integral part of a future Palestinian state.”

The Israeli military said there is already an operational control of 75% of the gas, but the new plan will propose to occupy the entire region – including areas where more than two million Palestinians now live.

The proposals turned out to be dividing in Israel with reports that the army chief and other military leaders were opposed to the strategy.

The unnamed Israeli employee replied, saying, “If this does not work for the headquarters, he must resign.”

A card showing parts of gas under Israeli military control or subject to evacuation orders

The hostage families expressed their fear that the decision could threaten their loved ones, with 20 of 50 being believed to be alive in gas.

The Jencha reiterated the UN Security Council call for the termination of fire and the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages.

Referring to the “poor” and “inhuman” conditions that the Palestinians face, he called on Israel to immediately resolve the unobstructed transition to sufficient help.

“Israel continues to seriously limit the humanitarian aid entering Gaza, and the aid that is allowed to enter is grossly insufficient,” Jencha said.

He also condemned the ongoing violence of food distribution sites, saying more than 1,200 Palestinians had been killed since late May while trying to access food and supplies.

Last week, the Hamas Health Ministry in Gaza said the total number of deaths from October 2023 has increased to 154, including 89 children.

He also reported that over 60,000 Palestinians had been killed as a result of Israel’s military campaign.

UN agencies have warned that Gaza has a mass hunger in Gaza and reported at least 63 deaths related to malnutrition this month.

Earlier, Israel insisted that there were no restrictions on the supply of help and that there was no “hunger” in Gaza.

Israel launched its military offensive in Gaza in response to Hamas’s attack on southern Israel on October 7, 2023, which killed about 1,200 people and 251 others taken in Gaza as hostages.

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